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Bye, Felicia!
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Politicians must refrain from dragging the rest of us into their personal red-blue battles.
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According to economist Stephen Miran, recessions are a 'unavoidable feature of economic life,' and they don't all look like the Great Financial Crisis. Some have a more 'garden-variety' feel about them.
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Bans on facial recognition software are deceptive. We can protect civil freedoms while while making appropriate use of technology (like finding missing children).
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'Just because you feel safe and in the clear a few months after filing your tax return does not mean that you are. This can be remembered for many, many years.'
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The quick rise in the value of the US dollar, according to economist Mohamed El-Erian, poses 'hazards.'
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It's no secret that wealthy individuals like to conceal their income from the Internal Revenue Service. Where they do it and how they do it are not always kept a secret.
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We can free ourselves of responsibility by blaming social media for the status of our public square. It also obscures the true causes of political polarization, which range from economic instability to fast cultural change.
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According to the Financial Times, a former US Air Force scientist is enraged by missed possibilities.
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Induced demand is the term used by economists to describe how increasing the supply of something (such as roads) makes people want it even more. Though some traffic engineers noticed this phenomena as early as the 1960s, it wasn't until recently that social scientists gathered enough data to illustrate how it happens almost every time we create a new route.